The Independent on Saturday

Pretorius to take a knee ahead of 3TC

- ZAAHIER ADAMS

SOUTH African cricket has taken its first steps to forging a way forward in its battle for racial equality in the sport after former Proteas captain Faf du Plessis admitted to having “got it wrong before” and that “conversati­on is the vehicle for change.”

Du Plessis, 36, led the way yesterday along with fellow white Proteas Dwaine Pretorius, Rassie van der Dussen, Anrich Nortje and Marizanne Kapp to publically pledge their support for the Black Lives Matter movement and Lungi Ngidi, saying “all lives don’t matter UNTIL black lives matter.”

Pretorius, meanwhile, stated that he will be taking a knee ahead of the 3TC match at SuperSport Park today because he believes “wholeheart­edly it is the right thing to do”.

The significan­ce of their testimonie­s cannot be undervalue­d, particular­ly after South African cricket was plunged into a racial storm last week when former Proteas Pat Symcox, Boeta Dippenaar, Brian McMillan and Rudi Steyn lambasted current fast bowler Ngidi for wanting to address Black Lives Matter within the national team dressing room.

This prompted a riposte from 32 black former Proteas and five coaches expressing their support for Ngidi and the Black Lives Movement, while calling on their white former teammates to stand alongside them in their quest for racial equality.

The potential for the divide to broaden even further was highlighte­d by an emotional television interview by iconic Proteas fast bowler Makhaya Ntini.

The 47-year-old Ntini spoke how “loneliness” forced him to run to the field instead of taking the team bus.

“The first thing that comes to mind when I think of loneliness, is to not have someone knocking on your door and say, let’s go for dinner. That’s loneliness. You’d watch friends calling each other and then having plans right in front of you and then you’d be skipped.”

Du Plessis, who has been active in various communitie­s providing aid to the poor and needy during lockdown while undergoing personal introspect­ion, admits that after listening to likes of Ntini’s story and seeking out “tough conversati­ons” with Springbok captain Siya Kolisi and teammate Temba Bavuma that he has a greater understand­ing of the “many injustices in our country”.

Said Du Plessis: “Good intentions were failed by a lack of perspectiv­e when I said on a platform that - I don’t see colour. In my ignorance I silenced the struggles of others by placing my own view on it.

“I’m speaking up now, because if I wait to be perfect, I never will.

“I want to leave a legacy of empathy. The work needs to continue for the change to come.”

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